Kilometric Abundance Index (KAI) is a common measure used in wildlife studies because it allows a
straightforward comparison of species abundance in different sites or at different times. KAI expresses the
ratio of the total number of individuals (or of signs of presence) observed along a transect by the total transect
length covered at each site. v.transect.kia is a new tool for GRASS GIS, developed for automating the evaluation
of KAI, reducing the risk of manual errors especially when handling large datasets. It can also split the
transects according to one environmental variable (typically habitat type) and evaluate true 3D transect
length. It calculates KAI using a point map of sightings and saves the results in the attribute table, the output
can be displayed in any GIS or used for further statistical analysis. The tool has been tested on field data from
Northern Italy for mountain hare (Lepus timidus), allowing a first wide-area estimate
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